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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৩ ফেব্রুয়ারি ২০২৫ সর্বশেষ আপডেট : ৭:৫১ পূর্বাহ্ণ
Trump had warm words for the Russian leader — who has ruled Russia for 25 years and has repeatedly invaded neighboring nations and killed, imprisoned or exiled his most formidable opposition — as he declared that the two men would visit each other’s countries and “agreed to work together, very closely.”
Trump, who also spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky later in the day, said that he and Putin would likely meet without Zelensky in Saudi Arabia “in the not too distant future.”
The call, which the Kremlin said lasted nearly 90 minutes, illustrated the deepening alliance between Trump and Putin in ways that are likely to unsettle Zelensky. In offering the first outline of his vision for a peace deal, Trump focused heavily on the terms that Russia cares most about and he appeared to rule out NATO membership for Ukraine while placing the bulk of the burden for defending it on Europe.
“I don’t think it’s practical to have it, personally,” Trump said of Ukraine’s efforts to join NATO. “They’ve been saying that for a long time that Ukraine cannot go into NATO, and I’m okay with that. I just want the war [to end] whether they are or they’re not.”
Trump also said that he agreed with comments made earlier in the day when Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told NATO allies that Ukraine’s stated goal of reclaiming its full internationally recognized territory was “unrealistic.”
Neither Trump nor his administration has made clear precisely what they want Russia to do in any peace deal. But they acknowledge that Russia will be able to remain in at least some of the territory it has captured from Ukraine in exchange for halting the war. They say that Ukraine will need security guarantees to give it stability and the incentive to set down its arms, and they expect Europe to be responsible for the bulk of those guarantees.
“I think we’ll probably end up at some point getting a ceasefire in the not too distant future,” he said.
In the highly charged choreography of diplomacy with an adversarial leader, the Trump-Putin call was likely to upset Kyiv, since President Joe Biden made a mantra of coordinating closely with Ukrainian leaders before any contacts with Russian officials. This time, Trump spoke first to Putin and afterward called Zelensky to loop him in on the conversation. Trump and Zelensky met in Paris in December.
“You know, his poll numbers aren’t particularly great, to put it mildly,” Trump added.
Putin has long sought to have a direct negotiation with Washington about Ukraine’s future, since he has argued that Ukraine is within Moscow’s sphere of influence and that it has been used as a tool by NATO and the West, something Ukrainian leaders hotly say ignores their nation’s desire to modernize and integrate more fully with Europe.
Trump said he had asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, national security adviser Michael Waltz and Witkoff to lead the discussions. Notably absent from the list was the hawkish retired general Keith Kellogg, whom Trump appointed during the transition as his special envoy for Ukraine and Russia and who has been working on a peace plan. Both Kellogg and Vice President JD Vance are headed to Munich this week to meet with senior European policymakers about the peace efforts.
“As for General Keith Kellogg, he remains a critical part of this team in this effort,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. “He’s played a tremendous role in getting the negotiations to this point, and he’s very much still part of the Trump administration.”
Zelensky posted a statement on his Telegram account confirming the conversation with Trump, which he said focused on achieving peace, technological capabilities including drone use, and the two nations’ ability to work together.
“President Trump informed me of the details of his conversation with Putin,” Zelensky wrote, adding that he was “grateful” for the call. “Ukraine wants peace more than anyone. We are defining our joint steps with America to stop Russian aggression and guarantee a reliable, lasting peace. As President Trump said, let’s get it done.”
“He’s going there to get a document done where we’re going to be assured that we’re going to, in some form, get this money back,” he said. “Because we’re putting up far more money than Europe, and Europe is in far more danger than we are.”
He said they will ask for natural resources such as rare earth metals, oil and gas to secure against the hundreds of billions in funds.
Trump has demanded that Putin put an end to the war, which started in February 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine without provocation. But Trump has offered few concrete indications about how he would foster a breakthrough, and some world leaders are worried he could push Kyiv into a deal that would simply give Russia time to rest, rearm and reinvade.
Wednesday’s phone call marks an important breakthrough for Putin, ending nearly three years of near-isolation from Western leaders imposed by the Biden administration. The last time Putin met a U.S. president was at a summit in Geneva with Biden in June 2021, eight months before the Russian leader’s invasion of Ukraine. Biden engaged in a flurry of calls with Putin in late 2021 and early 2022, attempting to dissuade him from invading, at a time when Russia insistently denied plans to do so. But there has been silence since.
Posted ৭:৫১ পূর্বাহ্ণ | বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৩ ফেব্রুয়ারি ২০২৫
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